Monday, September 23, 2013

What’s a New Mayor to Do? Bill de Blasio and Willets Point

We have been speculating about what a Mayor de Blasio might
do with the development of Willets Point when/if he gets into office in
January-arguing that he is under no obligation to rubber stamp a skewed Mike
Bloomberg vision.

We have been buoyed by his statements concerning thecorporate welfare give away to Fresh Direct: “Fresh Direct would never have
gotten more than $100 million in government subsidies to stay in New York
City if he ran City Hall, Bill de Blasio said Thursday. The Democratic
mayoral nominee said his administration would remove subsidies from large
companies such as Fresh Direct and “give them to smaller companies.” This
is a sign that de Blasio sees economic development in a radically different
light.

But if a Mayor de Blasio would balk at throwing $100 million
tax payer dollars at a crony of his predecessor, than how about $400 million
for two cronies? That’s the subject of our Op-ed in yesterday’s NY Daily News:

“In the first place,
the development at Willets Point was intended to be one of Mayor Bloomberg’s
signature legacy projects – the “first green neighborhood,” and all that
palaver. Instead, owing to the good work of the team assembled by Willets Point
United, the original mega-deal was derailed and the current Rosemary’s Baby was
given birth. Instead, of all the essential public benefits that were originally
negotiated — affordable housing, a living wage and traffic relieving ramps — we
have been given the city’s largest retail mall built on parkland. The property
taken under the threat of eminent domain is now earmarked for a parking lot.”

Any original whiff of public good has been aerosoled out by this
stinky new sweetheart deal

“Make no mistake about
it. When the original Willets Point deal was proposed by the city, there were
over 30 council members who had signed a letter opposing the project — and one
of the strongest bases for that opposition was the city’s threat to use
condemnation to take away property that had, in many cases, been in families
for decades.

This opposition was
only overridden when the Central Labor Council negotiated a “historic” living
wage provision — and the council negotiated a deal for 2000 units of affordable
housing. This was the linchpin of the compromise that enabled the council to
overcome their strong objection to the use of eminent domain.”

And then there’s the corporate welfare to dramatize just how
far from the public interest this gift to the Wilpons and Steve Ross really is:

“All of these promises
have been tossed aside in the city’s current Willets Point proposal — along
with the sworn assurances from Deputy Mayor Robert Lieber that the city would
be compensated for the $200 million it paid for the property purchased under
the threat of condemnation. Instead, the city is gifting the property to the
developers for $1!”

Only in Mike Bloomberg’s NYC, could gifting be so easily
turned into grifting-and as far as gifts are concerned, this is one that keeps
on giving for all of the critics of the mayor’s penchant to bend the rules when
it concerns him and his friends:

“Making a bad deal
that much worse is the fact that it has now been revealed by the Attorney
General of the State of New York that the original compromise that led to the
city council’s approval of the development in 2008 was advanced by an illegal
lobbying scheme devised by the Economic Development Corp. and a local
development group made up of real estate interests. The entire land use process
was tainted by illegality.”

Bill de Blasio has made a purposeful effort to let the city
know that he will not be doing any gratuitous giveaways to the 1%; and Willets
Point affords him the opportunity to make a real forceful demonstration of how
different he will be:

“So, Mayor de Blasio,
send a signal to the city that there is a new sheriff in town and things are
going to be done differently. We are not going to unceremoniously shunt aside
hardworking small businesses to aggrandize the interests of the 1%. Say No to
Willets West and set the tone for a different kind of politics.”

But Willets Point United has not been alone in this
fight-and the NYC Parks Advocates and the Queens Civic Congress have been
outraged by yet another aspect of the bad deal at Willets Point-the use and
abuse of parkland. Bob Harris makes this point in the Times Ledger:

“The Council is
holding hearings on the proposed Willets Point West Mall, which would use the
parking lot adjacent to Citi Field. This land was originally parkland, but was
leased to the New York Mets’ owners to be used as a parking lot for baseball
fans. Now the Mets owners want to build this large mall for private economic
development. If this parkland was not needed by the baseball team, then it
should have been repurposed and used by the community people who come here to
play and relax.

Fighting this
“giveaway” was the Queens Civic Congress, the Flushing Meadows Corona Park
Conservancy, the Fairness Coalition of Queens, Save Flushing Meadows Corona
Park, New York City Parks Advocates and other groups.”

Harris also points out that the mall will have a great deal
of collateral damage for small business in Queens-something that the merchants
of Jackson Heights and Corona are very much aware of: “The Queens Civic
Council, an umbrella organization of about 100 civic associations in Queens,
testified that if this mall is built, it will harm many small mom-and-pop
stores in surrounding communities as well as struggling malls in other parts of
Queens.”

So we urge the next mayor of the great City of New York to
send the right signal to all of the beleaguered small businesses, parks
advocates, and threatened property owners-and to the real estate barons who
have been feasting in Mike Bloomberg’s New York. As another Brooklynite might put it: Do the Right Thing!

John Adams (Founding Father & 2nd President of the United States):

"The moment the idea is admitted into society that property is not as sacred as the laws of God, and there is not a force of law and public justice to protect it, anarchy and tyranny commence. Property must be sacred or liberty cannot exist."

Jake Bono on Fox News

Private Property Rights Protection Act of 2012

The Neighborhood Retail Alliance

Queens Crap

The Bullpen Shop

Under the plan of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, The Bullpen Shop is to be demolished and its property forcibly acquired via eminent domain, to enable the Mayor's controversial $4,000,000,000.00 legacy development project.